108 SHIRTING THE ISSUE . . . Nardis of Dallas provides a contour belt for you who prefer your chemise line defined. Silky-soft, Sunrise Arnel-and-cotton needs little ironing. Apncot, aqua or navy. Sizes 8 to 18. 19.95 j;t.l ' I) I'. ".... ," .. . .- () (), .f -.' ..6 -. o. , o () v-- , } :\ \. \ - mail and phone orders filled M U 8-6800 please add 35c for postage. YOUNG Tailored W-OIrl Il 5th Ave. at 57th St. Eugene K. Denton, Pres. admired French educationalist, the late Very Reverend Father Le Goc, rector of St. ] oseph's College, Colombo, joined together to erect to hIm. The memorIal was to be a clock on a plinth in the mid- dle of a busy traffic intersection. Things got as far as heaving the plinth into position, but when Colombo woke up next mornIng, someone had placed a bttle statue of the Buddha on top. Be- cause of the ugly current mood, the statue was left sitting there, cordoned 9:ff behind barbed wire to prevent fur- ther demonstrations, and Buddhists im- mediately petitioned the Prime Minister to have a little canopy built over it, to protect the Enlightened One from the raIn Since the huge reclining and standing rock figures of Buddha in the ancient ruined city of Polonnaruwa, and elsewhere, have been facing the weather for many centuries without causing distress among the faithful, this sudden concern seemed strange. How- ever, an odd little tin roof has now been built, at M r Bandaranaike's or- ders, and angry editorials and letters on the subject, including protests from Father Le Goc's naturally annoyed pupils, continue to turn up in the Co- lombo press. No one seems to know what wj1] happen to the clock. Many liberal-minded Singhalese make apolo- getic fun of the incident when descrIb- ing it to a visiting foreigner, but all the same it is as good an illustration as dnv of how strongly the mood of "Ceylon for the Buddhists," which put this government into power, is still runnIn g. .. A S In other countries feeling the ex- n. hila rating surge of independence, there is much popular enthusiasm around Colombo for nationalizing ev- erything in sight. The buses-scarlet double-deckers that give visitors nostal- gic thoughts of Piccadilly as they lum- ber along Galle Face front, even though they have sarong-clad passengers hanging out of every window and lack the familiar Oxo and Guinness adver- tisements-have just been nationalized. ...l\ccordIng to most local opinion, the ef- ficiency of the service has not notably increased. There are frequent rumors of the impending nationalization of the tea and rubber industries, and the North Ceylon Toddy Tappers Association has submitted plans for natIonalizing the toddy palms, from which the highly lethal local drink called arrack ( an d said to be the cause of the formidable homicide rate in these parts) is distilled. The Prime Minister has declared more than once that the tea estates will not be <-; (' ç," tJ -. '>.' * f :>) >>. v o " ',. ,., w n 1 I , oJ'< x' *. / ":;: <-: "" w..... ú. .. ?:.. ....:: "'8"' The Paris hat ."" .J turns to the soft slouch for dayNme intrigue, in a design by Pochet-ogain, ours alone White, red, blue, tan, 25 00 Fashion Bazaar, Lord & Taylor PIAZZA-MONTICI original , '" , :;; J; 'I, -;t,\ -; '\\,\ , ' enchanting I \ This Italian garden chair is of wrought iron in green with white and yellow daisies Seat ht. 18". $45.00. Shipped express collect. P . M the lazza ontlci 40 EAST 51st ST., NEW YORK, N. Y. . PL 5-8826 ....:.. .....#' . .. Mr.... AniI..r-ew CO-ødtn;(Jn, Pr-esident 01 .Bergað1'f Cooå"moJl. ., - \ ... portrait by Fabian BQChroch .::. the man .'..::lIJ!tO S hoots .":::..P1--esidents -* I ':3f :::54 Eaðt 52nd St,.. yewYlJrk ..... PLaza .5:..6238 THE THIRD GENERATION OF A FAMILV OF PORTRAIT PHOTOGRAPHERS WHO HAVE PHOTOGRAPHED EVERV PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED 'STATES SINCE LINCOLN